DocketNumber: No. CV98 0165506
Judges: RYAN, JUDGE.
Filed Date: 2/23/1999
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
On August 6, 1996, at approximately 9:15 a.m., the plaintiffs, Walter and Jean Urda, entered the Stop Shop store located on River Road in Wilton, Connecticut. They walked around the store picking up assorted groceries and paid for them at the checkout. After paying for the groceries, they proceeded to the exit which consisted of two automatic doors. Mr. Urda was ahead of his wife as they exited and was through the second door when she slipped and fell. The force of the fall was such that she was thrown against the interior brick wall and landed perpendicular to the two doors. Mrs. Urda claimed that she fell because of accumulations of plant leaves, water and debris CT Page 2427 which had been permitted to accumulate in the exit area. According to the testimony of Mrs. Urda, after the fall she was "sitting in water," and she "saw leaves on the floor." She saw the leaves "going out to the entrance, going towards the second door." She believed that she slipped on ficus leaves. She believed that the plants may have been watered and brought out, which they normally do.
John Ryder, assistant manager at the Wilton Stop Shop, stated that the policy of the Stop Shop is to water the plants in the outside staging area which is directly in front of the entrance/exit doors. There was no cashier located outside to pay for the plants located there. Any person wishing to purchase plants from that area had to bring the plants inside, pay for them and then carrying them back out through the same doors.
Jean Urda and Irene Prosk in the past had purchased plants from this particular Stop Shop and had noted that often the plants had water and debris falling off them as they exited.
Mrs. Urda sustained a multiple fracture of her right humerus which required open reduction, an illiacrest graft, and the insertion of a titanium plate because the fracture did not heal initially. Mrs. Urda required round the clock care for an extended time period after the accident and still requires care on a minimal level. She has a permanent plate in her shoulder and has a 25% permanent disability to her upper extremity and a 10% permanent disability to her lower extremity.
The court finds that the testimony offered by the plaintiffs was of great weight and credibility.
The court was not persuaded by the necessary quantum of proof that the alleged defect existed for a reasonable period of time. There was no evidence that if any defect existed that defect was caused by the defendant." The general burden of proof in civil actions is on the plaintiff, who must prove all the essential allegations of the complaint;" Gulycz v. Stop Shop Cos., supra,
Even if the court were to find that the alleged defect was caused by the defendant, the plaintiff still has not proven the necessary element that the defendant had prior notice of the defect. The plaintiff produced no evidence to establish that the defendant had actual notice of the alleged defect. Whether the defendant had constructive notice of the alleged defect turns on whether the defect existed for a length of time sufficient for the defendant's employees, in the exercise of due care, to discover the defect in time to have remedied it. McCrorey v.Heilpern,
While an abundance of evidence is not necessary to show a sufficient length of time existed for discovery of a defect; seeKapnotis v. Shop Rite Supermarkets, Inc.,
Although circumstantial evidence can establish constructive notice; Sokolowski v. Medi Mart, Inc.,
Relying on Fuller v. First National Supermarkets, Inc.,
The plaintiff's attempt also to rely on Tuite v. The Stop Shop Cos.,
Judgment may enter for the defendant.
RYAN, J.